The impact of silane chemistry conditions on the properties of wood plastic composites with low density polyethylene and high wood content

Abstract

Silane chemistry was implemented on various formulations of wood/thermoplastic polymer composites (WPCs) with low density polyethylene (LDPE) and high wood content (60 wt%). Taguchi analysis was used to evaluate the impact of vinyltrimethoxysilane content (VTMS), dicumyl peroxide content (DCP), and processing temperature on the rheological, morphological, and dynamic mechanic properties of WPCs. The torque power was measured by a Haake torque rheometer and indicated that the VTMS content and temperature most significantly impacted the rheological properties related to silane reactions. Differential scanning calorimetry also showed a larger depression in LDPE melting point and crystallinity index when a high VTMS content (35 phr), high DCP content (0.5 phr), and a high compounding temperature (200°C) were used. With dynamic mechanical analysis (DMA), it was shown that the compounded formulations had a higher storage modulus over a wide range of temperature whereas the β transition temperature increased with higher content in silane reactants. Interestingly, the high humidity/temperature conditioning step aimed at crosslinking resulted in a drop of dynamic moduli compared to the freshly compounded formulations. This was explained by the fact that during compounding of LDPE with high wood content and silane reactants, significant amounts of matrix and interfacial silane crosslinking already occurred. Subsequent conditioning in a high humidity and temperature environment was proposed to hydrolyze the interfacial siloxane bonds resulting in a degradation of mechanical properties. POLYM. COMPOS., 2010. © 2009 Society of Plastics Engineers

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
May 12, 2009
Source ID
10.1002/pc.20873

Entities

People

  • Marie‐pierre G. Laborie
  • Yu Geng

Organizations

  • Office of Naval Research

Tags

Fields of Study

  • Materials science

Readers

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  • Reinforced Composite Materials
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